Scariest night I can remember. We lived in the Village of Pickwick Apartments off of Millbrook Road.
36 years ago today.
1988:
There was no warning. Not from the National Weather Service, and not from Raleigh's local television stations. Even if anyone had been looking for it, they wouldn't have seen it at one o'clock in the morning. Not even the local weather radar spotted it in the early morning darkness, since, as fate would have it, it forms almost directly over the Raleigh-Durham airport. Because of the FAA's powerful situational radars in 1988 using the same radio bands tracking the planes on approach and departure, there is a blind spot for weather radars directly over the airport. ON THIS DAY, completely unseen, a raging F4 tornado touches down first in Umstead State Park and begins to hop-skip its way toward an unsuspecting Raleigh.
The only warning for the North Raleigh suburbs is the tell-tell roar described as like a passing freight train as the tornado begins to carve its way through 2500 homes and 75 businesses. Entire shopping centers, including the Glenwood Avenue K-Mart, are ripped apart as it tears through a sleeping Northern Wake County.
Tragically two children are killed, 9-year-old Janet Barnes and 12-year-old Pete Fulghum, and 157 more are injured. In all, more than 425 residences are destroyed. In addition, as the tornado lifts into Nash County, a couple is killed as the storm rips their mobile home apart.
In 30 minutes, it is over. The tornado weakens as it moves northeast into Franklin County, and dissipates as it eventually crosses Interstate 95. It leaves $77
36 years ago today.
1988:
There was no warning. Not from the National Weather Service, and not from Raleigh's local television stations. Even if anyone had been looking for it, they wouldn't have seen it at one o'clock in the morning. Not even the local weather radar spotted it in the early morning darkness, since, as fate would have it, it forms almost directly over the Raleigh-Durham airport. Because of the FAA's powerful situational radars in 1988 using the same radio bands tracking the planes on approach and departure, there is a blind spot for weather radars directly over the airport. ON THIS DAY, completely unseen, a raging F4 tornado touches down first in Umstead State Park and begins to hop-skip its way toward an unsuspecting Raleigh.
The only warning for the North Raleigh suburbs is the tell-tell roar described as like a passing freight train as the tornado begins to carve its way through 2500 homes and 75 businesses. Entire shopping centers, including the Glenwood Avenue K-Mart, are ripped apart as it tears through a sleeping Northern Wake County.
Tragically two children are killed, 9-year-old Janet Barnes and 12-year-old Pete Fulghum, and 157 more are injured. In all, more than 425 residences are destroyed. In addition, as the tornado lifts into Nash County, a couple is killed as the storm rips their mobile home apart.
In 30 minutes, it is over. The tornado weakens as it moves northeast into Franklin County, and dissipates as it eventually crosses Interstate 95. It leaves $77
I asked a ref if he could give me a technical foul for thinking bad things about him. He said, of course not. I said, well, I think you stink. And he gave me a technical. You can't trust em.